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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Show'n'Shine Saloon
Paint correction – the hard way!
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<blockquote data-quote="TransAxle" data-source="post: 10545567" data-attributes="member: 62587"><p>Thats not the worse case of micro-marring I have seen. But its always casued by improper use of a wool pad or an extremely dirty foam pad...as you yourself saw first hand. The towels though, is called towel-marring.. lol. Its a pretty common thing. Generally means either your microfiber towels are not soft enough, to thin or have been used so much to the point that they have degraded and are not worth using on paint anymore. </p><p></p><p>For referrence, I had a customer contact me saying he has his car detailed by a "professional" and this is what he was left with...</p><p></p><p>Quarter Before and After:</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH=full]169865[/ATTACH]</p><p>[ATTACH=full]169866[/ATTACH]</p><p></p><p>Thats why its always best to make sure to keep your buffing pads clean. Once one has been used across multiple panels or filled with polishes or compounds set it aside or clean it. Best to have a bucket filled with a pad washing chemical sitting around to stick them as a type of pre-soak before the polishes/compounds dry into the pad. Will help you prevent things like that happening again.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TransAxle, post: 10545567, member: 62587"] Thats not the worse case of micro-marring I have seen. But its always casued by improper use of a wool pad or an extremely dirty foam pad...as you yourself saw first hand. The towels though, is called towel-marring.. lol. Its a pretty common thing. Generally means either your microfiber towels are not soft enough, to thin or have been used so much to the point that they have degraded and are not worth using on paint anymore. For referrence, I had a customer contact me saying he has his car detailed by a "professional" and this is what he was left with... Quarter Before and After: [ATTACH=full]169865[/ATTACH] [ATTACH=full]169866[/ATTACH] Thats why its always best to make sure to keep your buffing pads clean. Once one has been used across multiple panels or filled with polishes or compounds set it aside or clean it. Best to have a bucket filled with a pad washing chemical sitting around to stick them as a type of pre-soak before the polishes/compounds dry into the pad. Will help you prevent things like that happening again. [/QUOTE]
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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Show'n'Shine Saloon
Paint correction – the hard way!
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